Did the Mainstream Media Blame Puerto Rico for Its Hurricane Disaster?

The lack of empathy. Blaming the island for its dire situation, citing massive debt, poor infrastructure, and a failing power grid? The gall.

Of course, I'm talking about the mainstream media, which has repeatedly pointed out Puerto Rico's bankruptcy troubles both before and after Hurricane Maria's devastation in the Caribbean.

But Donald Trump has a unique effect on the media that makes them forget anything that happened five minutes ago, ignore every past position, in their zest for finding the best spin that depicts Trump in the worst light.

Ed Note: What Puerto Rico Needs is a Bankruptcy "Governor Administrator" that runs the country for 48 months to end socialism, welfare for all, rebuild infrastructure, pass permanent laws ending socialistic economy and Chicago style government. It would diminish the duties of other officials to the role of administrators for the Governor Administrator. It would allow any of them who get out of line to be fired and replaced during the tenure of the Administrator. For that the U.S. would help bail them out put the island back together, rebuild the infrastructure and be charged with taking whatever steps are necessary to end violence and crime, bring jobs, industry and tourism back to the Island.

On Monday night Trump sent off a series of tweets about the crisis in Puerto Rico.

Texas & Florida are doing great but Puerto Rico, which was already suffering from broken infrastructure & massive debt, is in deep trouble..

Curiously, the fact checkers did not choose to check these tweets, because it was all true. (Though PolitiFact took the president to task for saying Maria had winds of 200 mph. The storm's maximum sustained winds were a measly 155 mph, with gusts of 195.)

What would do the most damage to Trump in this situation? The media quickly determined it was his " lack of empathy."

Her colleague Stephanie Ruhle was especially perturbed. On Tuesday she opened an interview on the disaster response efforts with FEMA administrator Brock Long, asking about the most pressing issue of the day: the president's tweets.

"Puerto Rico's debt crisis has absolutely nothing to do with the hurricane of a category 4 or 5 wiping out this island," she chided.

Ruhle brought it up again during a segment with host Katy Tur.

"Look at the president's tweets last night about Puerto Rico, he's borderline blaming them for their indebtedness," she said, before using the occasion to blast Trump for his own bankruptcy filings in the past.

"What on earth does that have to do with human hardship and need?" asked Harold Ford, the other Democrat on the panel. "It says a lot about where his head is on this thing. I'm glad you raised those points about his bankruptcies, and for him to raise that issue at this moment, tone-deaf doesn't begin to explain how out of touch he is."

"It also speaks to where he gets his information from," said Ruhle.

Indeed, Trump must be reading the Washington Post and listening to NPR.

"Recovery efforts in Puerto Rico could be hampered by long-standing financial problems that led the territorial government to file for a form of bankruptcy in May," the Post reported before the storm hit.

"Well before this year's series of historically powerful hurricanes, Puerto Rico already had a notoriously fickle power supply and crushing debt," NPR reported. "And Puerto Rico's weak infrastructure will make it difficult to provide the aid that it desperately needs."